Vocabulary
- wait for: To wait until someone comes, or something happens
- speak to: To address or communicate with someone.
- for the main: Intended for the primary or main person or thing.
- come along: To go with someone who takes the lead
- picnic: Meal that is eaten outdoors, sitting on the ground
- food: What people and animals eat to live
- cream: Pale color that is yellowish white
- juice: Liquids (often squeezed from vegetables, fruit)
- ice: Frozen gas or liquid, esp. water
- year: Unit of time equal to 12 months or 365 or 366 days
- cheese: Yellowish solid food made from aged milk
- stop: To block or close something
- drink: To put water in your body through your mouth
- practise: To work as a doctor or lawyer
- worry: Something that causes trouble or concern
- choose: To select; decide between several possibilities
- speak: To be able to use a certain language
- eat: To put food in your mouth
- friend: Person who you like and enjoy being with
- magic: Attractive, appealing, and exciting quality
- lemonade: Drink that has a lemon flavor
- bit: Device put in a horse's mouth to control it
- castle: Large defensive building in historical times
- spell: To lead to future trouble
- repeat: Action that is done again
- strange: Unusual or odd; surprising because unexpected
- empty: Containing nothing; with no contents
- ham: Smoked meat from leg of a pig, often eaten cold
- pity: Feeling very sorry for someone, e.g. in trouble
- suppose: To imagine or guess what might happen
- join: To bring something close to another, to become one
- ring: A roped area in which people fight or box
- adventure: An exciting and often dangerous experience
- include: To make someone, something part of a group
- basket: Amount contained in a basket; a basketful
- flood: To quickly appear unexpectedly and in volume
- sparkle: To shine with a lot of very small points of light
- smelly: Having an unpleasant odor or smell
- plenty: When there is not too little of something; a lot
- blow: To move something using air
- cabbage: Round green vegetable with tightly packed leaves
- reminding: To cause someone to remember what they forgot
- declare: To make a statement in a strong and confident way
- charm: Quality of making people like you; attractiveness
- strawberry: Sweet fleshy red fruit
- lightning: Flashes of light in the sky caused by a storm
- custom: Person's regular, daily habit or practice
- emergency: Sudden event needing an immediate action
- luckily: In a good way; by good fortune
- royal: Excellent or grand; suitable for a king or queen
- pudding: Baked dishes for dessert
- shrink: To become smaller
- kingdom: Category of the natural world
- command: To be able to see far from a certain location
- exotic: Being very different or unusual
- impressive: Causing admiration or respect; grand or expensive
- fairy: Small imaginary being that can do magic
- jelly: Semisolid food substance, eaten as dessert
- woof: Yarn woven across the warp yarn in weaving
- dollop: Measure or amount, usually of food, e.g. ice cream
- growl: To utter a deep sound of anger or hostility
- rotten: Gone bad; broken into pieces through dying
- stinky
Get the full experience in the app
Learn anywhere with detailed sentence and usage analysis
01:03
She took a brave step forward, leaving behind her comfort zone to chase her dreams.
Vocabulary
- brave
adj. Having courage
- comfort zone
phr. A familiar situation where one feels safe
Explanation
a brave step is a noun phrase, where brave is an adjective modifying the noun step, meaning "a courageous step".
forward is an adverb modifying step, meaning "ahead".
The whole phrase serves as the object, answering the "what" of took (verb) — she took a brave step forward.
Get the full experience in the app
Look up words anytime with pronunciation, part of speech, and usage
brave
US/brev/
UK/breɪv/
adj.Brave
v.t.To bravely face
A2 Elementary
Get the full experience in the app
Practice speaking anytime and get instant pronunciation feedback
Try this speaking exercise.
Try practicing with this sentence.
80
0
光合作用 posted on 2016/10/09Get ready for a whimsical adventure with Ben and Holly in "The Royal Fairy Picnic"! You'll pick up practical, everyday phrases perfect for social situations as you follow their magical picnic plans and a hilarious jelly flood. This is a super fun way to practice simple sentence structures with charming characters!
Learn this video on the APP!
The VoiceTube App has more in-depth practice for videos!
